Researchers track the impacts of depression during pregnancy
Babies born to depressed moms have higher levels of stress hormones, decreased muscle tone, U-M study finds
ANN ARBOR, Mich. - The cocktail of hormones cascading through depressed mothers' bodies may play an important role in the development of their unborn children's brains.
A higher level of depression in mothers during pregnancy was associated with higher levels of stress hormones in their children at birth, as well as with other neurological and behavioral differences, a University of Michigan-led study found.
"The two possibilities are that they are either more sensitive to stress and respond more vigorously to it, or that they are less able to shut down their stress response," says the study's lead investigator, Delia M. Vazquez, M.D., a professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the University of Michigan Medical School.
The analysis, which appears online ahead of print publication in Infant Behavior and Development, examined links between maternal depression and the development of an infants' neuroendocrine system, which controls the body's stress response, as well as moods and emotions.
At two weeks old, researchers found that the children of depressed mothers had decreased muscle tone compared to those born to mothers who weren"t depressed, yet they adjusted more quickly to stimuli like a bell, rattle or light - a sign of neurological maturity.